In the eyes of the snobbish, close-knit Austrian monarchy and aristocracy, it was the wedding which should have never happened. In fact, based on the embarrassingly small party who watched the heir to the Hapsburg throne marry a Bohemian lady-in-waiting, it simply did not happen. Nevertheless, Archduke Franz Ferdinand defied his rank, his family, and society to marry the woman he loved, and the fourteen years of marriage he and Duchess Sophie were permitted, further defied the unspoken edict to find love outside of a dynastic match.

Franz Ferdinand’s life changed drastically when Crown Prince Rudolf committed suicide at Mayerling in 1889. Prior to that, he was simply the eldest son of the younger brother of Emperor Franz Joseph and the ill-fated Archduke Maximilian, the short-lived Emperor of Mexico. His father, Archduke Karl Ludwig, quickly renounced his succession rights, leaving the twenty-six year old army captain as heir presumptive to the Austro-Hungarian throne. From then on, Franz Ferdinand’s life was highly regulated as he was groomed to rule a nation comprised of almost a dozen ethnicities who spoke just as many languages, spread across a territory of 239,977 square miles. He was also considered a very eligible bachelor, though the very, very strict and suffocating laws that ruled the Hapsburg monarchy only considered members of one of the reigning or formerly reigning dynasties of Europe as an eligible marriage partner. Countess Sophie Chotek, a Bohemian (Czech) aristocrat, was definitely ineligible.
Sophie, though a member of a prominent Bohemian aristocratic family whose ancestry included some royal lineage from the female line, was very much below the Archduke in rank and importance and actually served as lady-in-waiting to one of the Hapsburg relations. It was in this capacity that she and Franz Ferdinand met and fell in love, whereupon they conducted a secret courtship through letters for two years. He managed to meet with Sophie under the guise of visiting her employers, the Friedrich and Archduchess Isabella, but unfortunately, the Archduchess assumed he’d fallen in love with one of her daughters. When the his true motives were discovered, scandal broke upon the house of Hapsburg. Sophie was immediately dismissed from her position in the Archduchess’s house, forcing Franz Ferdinand to openly declare his love and his intentions to marry no other woman.
The Emperor and the Imperial family were furious, and Pope Leo XIII, Tsar Nicholas II of Russia, and the German Emperor Wilhelm II all interceded on Franz Ferdinand’s behalf. Franz Josef, faced with this double humiliation, finally consented to the alliance, but Franz Ferdinand had to agree to a morganatic marriage and renounce the claim to the throne for any children he had with Sophie. Sophie would not share her husband’s rank, title, or precedence, which in the strict Hapsburg etiquette, forced her to enter rooms behind every Archduchess, even if she were but a child. Sophie and Franz Ferdinand married July 1, 1900, at Reichstadt in Bohemia with only his stepmother and step-sisters as witnesses–a wedding ceremony starkly unlike one he would have received had he married a woman of his rank. The Emperor raised Sophie to Princess of Hohenberg, with the style Her Serene Highness, which helped a little, but not much. Because of the snubbing of his wife, and the friction his choice of bride created between he and his uncle, the Emperor, Franz Ferdinand and Sophie created their own family life together with their three children. Though we all know of the tragic ending of their lives, the marriage of Archduke Franz Ferdinand and Countess Sophie Chotek is both romantic and pragmatic, for the heir to the throne renounced the typical dynastic marriage for love.
Thus ends me Royal Wedding series! How many of you stayed up late (or woke early) to see the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge)? Anyone throw a royal wedding party? What were your favorite parts? Leave your responses below to be entered into the drawing for Royal Weddings by Emily Brand!
9 Responses to “Royal Wedding #6: Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria & Countess Sophie Chotek”








April 29th, 2011 at 10:35 AM
I tried to wake up early, but I couldn’t do it! And then my DVR stopped before the wedding ceremony was even over!!! So, now I’m bummed.
April 29th, 2011 at 5:55 PM
“Though we all know of the tragic ending of their lives, the marriage of Archduke Franz Ferdinand and Countess Sophie Chotek is both romantic and pragmatic, for the heir to the throne renounced the typical dynastic marriage for love.”
The ironic thing about this story is that yes, people do indeed know the tragic ending of their lives. The trouble is noone knew the part about when they were alive. I now have something of a new respect for Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria.
I would like to thank the palace for putting the Wills’ and Kate’s wedding on at prime time for Melbourne and Sydney audiences – 6.30-8.30 PM. Perfect!
April 29th, 2011 at 10:11 PM
Great series of articles. In my royal wedding-induced curiosity I’ve been reading (again) on English monarchs, mainly about lines of sucession, and there are more than a few kings and such who defied tradition or custom or, more often, family, to marry for love.
April 30th, 2011 at 3:02 AM
Like Hels above, the coverage started at an appropriate time for me though staying up till 11pm ws a stretch! We drank Pims with lemonade then made scones and had a late night Devonshire tea to celebrate all things English
April 30th, 2011 at 6:24 PM
I watched the highlights of the royal wedding later in the day and I wish I’d seen the wedding earlier. It looked so lovely, the bride’s stunning gown and the charming hats worn by ladies.
April 30th, 2011 at 7:37 PM
I have loved the whole series about the royals. I think it’s a horrible shame that Archduke Franz Ferdinand and Countess Sophie were treated worse than mud on the bottom of a shoe! But they did at least have happiness before his death.
I tried to stay up for William and Catherine’s wedding but I just couldn’t make it. I have, however, enjoyed seeing the highlights of the wedding.
April 30th, 2011 at 11:27 PM
Fascination with the royals means fascination with history. Catherine’s grace and beauty is cllear; the pomp and circumstance was fascinating. This young couple seems to be a point of promise for the British, but also for the world.
May 1st, 2011 at 3:18 AM
I had to stop my history lesson the other day (about the origins of the First World War) to explain just who Franz Ferdinand and Sophie were and went on a little royalty ramble. Thankfully they’re used to my royalty obsession by now.
Thankfully I’m English, so got to see the wedding at the proper time (and didn’t have to crawl out of bed at two in the morning) and celebrated with champagne and…doughnuts. I desperately want a wedding dress like Catherine’s and my only regret was that I didn’t have enough money to go down to London myself.
May 2nd, 2011 at 11:07 AM
I watched as much of the wedding as I was able (I had to chase children then go out) and I loved it. I thought both Kate’s and the bridesmaids dresses were beautiful and I totally swooned when Harry said ‘wait til you see her’ as Kate walked up the aisle!